
Give the Gift of Choice!
Too many options? Treat your friends and family to their favourite stores with a Bayshore Shopping Centre gift card, redeemable at participating retailers throughout the centre. Click below to purchase yours today!Purchase HereHome
Maybe Dying Is Like Becoming A Butterfly
Coles
Loading Inventory...
Maybe Dying Is Like Becoming A Butterfly in Ottawa, ON
By None
Current price: $24.95


By None
Maybe Dying Is Like Becoming A Butterfly in Ottawa, ON
Current price: $24.95
Loading Inventory...
Size: Picture Book (2019 A)
*Product information may vary - to confirm product availability, pricing, shipping and return information please contact Coles
"Straightforward, gentle, useful, and engaging. " - Kirkus Reviews
When Grandpa suggests that a caterpillar might die if Christopher puts it in a jar.
“Are you going to die, Grandpa?”
“Someday, sweetheart. But I hope not too soon.”
Their simple exchange covers a lot of philosophical ground. Grandpa allows that “no one really knows” what happens after death, but he tells Christopher that some people think of heaven (“a place without sadness or war”), others of rebirth (“each time, you get wiser”), and others of “nothing” (“the same as before you were born”). The pair discusses the whys of death (“dying is part of life”), birth (“to learn all sorts of things”), and feelings of fear or comfort about dying.
An important picture book that gives children free rein to express their questions, fears, thoughts, and ideas about death. For children ages 5 and up. Including an epilogue by the grief therapist Rebecca Dabekaussen, with tips on how to discuss this difficult but inevitable subject with children.
Guided Reading Level O
"Straightforward, gentle, useful, and engaging. " - Kirkus Reviews
When Grandpa suggests that a caterpillar might die if Christopher puts it in a jar.
“Are you going to die, Grandpa?”
“Someday, sweetheart. But I hope not too soon.”
Their simple exchange covers a lot of philosophical ground. Grandpa allows that “no one really knows” what happens after death, but he tells Christopher that some people think of heaven (“a place without sadness or war”), others of rebirth (“each time, you get wiser”), and others of “nothing” (“the same as before you were born”). The pair discusses the whys of death (“dying is part of life”), birth (“to learn all sorts of things”), and feelings of fear or comfort about dying.
An important picture book that gives children free rein to express their questions, fears, thoughts, and ideas about death. For children ages 5 and up. Including an epilogue by the grief therapist Rebecca Dabekaussen, with tips on how to discuss this difficult but inevitable subject with children.
Guided Reading Level O


















